Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Rev. Edward Casaubon / ˈ k æ z ə b ɑː n /: A pedantic, selfish, elderly clergyman who is so taken up with his scholarly research that his marriage to Dorothea is loveless. His unfinished book, The Key to All Mythologies , is intended as a monument to Christian syncretism , but his research is out of date as he cannot read German.
The marriage proves unsatisfying and ends with Casaubon's unexpected death. While still married, Dorothea meets Will Ladislaw, an event which leads to further complications. Meanwhile, Dr Lydgate gets married and goes ahead with his ambitious plans for a hospital, but finds himself in difficulty both financially and with local political pressures.
John Casaubon (1636-1692) was a country 'surgeon' who practised in and around the Canterbury area. He kept a diary of some of his cases and family matters. It ends with the self-diagnosis of the oesophageal cancer which finally caused his death. The diary is kept at Southampton Archives. Anne Casaubon (c. 1649-1686) was the last child to be born.
Ashley Darby’s divorce may soon be finalized. “It’s in the hands of Virginia State,” the Real Housewives of Potomac star, 36, told Andy Cohen on Watch What Happens Live on Sunday, Jan. 12.
The outlet obtained the divorce docs filed in Atlanta. The divorce news comes days after the Atlanta Black Star published a re RHOA's Porsha Williams Files for Divorce From Husband Simon After 15 ...
South Korean billionaire Chey Tae-won has been ordered to pay 1.38tn won (£788m, $1bn) in cash to his wife in what would be the country’s largest divorce settlement payout.. The chairman of the ...
However, despite the fact that Dorothea Christina was able to prove her pure noble descent by generations back Joachim Frederick forced his brother to accept a settlement. The settlement was prepared by the court, signed by both brothers in Norburg on 24 November 1702 and confirmed by the Danish king on 5 December 1702. [1]
Dorothea and Friedrich lived in Paris from 1802 until 1804, and after her divorce, they married as Protestants. In 1807, she translated "Corinne" by Madame de Staël from French. In 1808, Friedrich and Dorothea converted to Catholicism. (She may have adopted the name "Dorothea" from a 17th-century Dorothea von Schlegel who composed Catholic hymns).